Food & Drink0 min ago
Isn't Nature Wonderful?
This morning whilst preparing my breakfast, I looked out of the kitchen window and there, on the garden, looking for worms, was a busy blackbird. Then, out of nowhere it seemed, a cat came racing in and grabbed the bird in its paws and proceeded to kill it. The cat stepped back, sat looking at its handywork, looked round then got up and walked off leaving a dead blackbird on my garden, which I then put in a bag and then in the bin. These are the fluffy things that are the favourite of many on here.
Your cat doesn't do that of course, does it? Ooooo no, no, no. Cats are the biggest threat to small wildlife in this country than anything else. I know. I've said it before, because it's true.
So next time your little ball of fluff cuddles up to you, it might just have blood on it from a recent kill. Nah! No it wouldn't. Not your little kitty kitty. Isn't nature wonderful?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by 10ClarionSt. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.A domestic cat isnt part of nature though, it has been falsly introduced and lacks preditors which it would have in the wild.
Anyone responsible would put a bell on it as suggested above, sadly too many think their little darling is beyond reproach.
I wonder if the same attitude of its only nature would be extended to the cat being mashed by say a Boxer?
Cats need bells? What for exactly. Some cats have collars to which a bell could be attached if you were a bird lover. Our cat has a chip instead as do many.
The OP is a piece of mischievous trolling. I think most cat owners are well aware that cats are predators. So are birds. So are some worms probably 🙄🙄🙄
My wonderful little cat (my last due to my now having asthma) killed mice, lots of mice - which was her job. This was in France. She was only a small cat and yet I also saw her tackle and kill rats almost as big as she was. Good stuff!
To cap it all I twice saw her juggle with and kill an aspic - small poisonous snake - the first time I was within moments of being bitten by said snake.
Funnily enough she left birds alone - something to do with my having free-range chickens (including Bantams). I saw her trying to stalk a chick once and her punishment from the mother bird was severe. She learned. Back in UK she wore a bell, just in case.